Hassan Mohamed Shehata (born in 1964, in Cairo Governorate) is an Egyptian trade unionist and politician currently serving as minister of Manpower in the Egyptian cabinet. He was elected secretary-general of the Federation of the Egyptian Trade Union in 2022 for a term of four years. [1]
Hassan Mohamed Shehata, born in 1964 in Cairo Governorate earned a bachelor's degree and Post Graduate Diploma in Marketing from Institute of Cooperative Studies. [2] He served concurrently as a member of the board of directors of the EgyptAir holding company and Egyptian Academy of Aviation Sciences in 2013. He was elected vice president of the General Federation of Egyptian Trade Unions in 2013 and later elected to the presidency of General Union of Air Transport in 2018. In 2021, he assumed the position of President of the General Federation of Egyptian Trade Unions following the passing of the union's president Mohamed Wahballah. [3] He was elected president of the union for a term of four years (2022–2026) in June 2022 after polling 245 votes to beat his opponent Adel Abdel-Fadil who scored 170 votes. [4]
He was appointed minister of Manpower on 13 August 2022 in a cabinet reshuffle that saw the exit of Mohamed Saafan from the ministry. Following assumption of office, Shehata presented to the Egyptian cabinet a proposal and secured approval on 1 June 2023 for the change of the name of Ministry of Manpower to Ministry of Labour to widen the scope of the ministry's responsibilities to cover all labour related issues in line with the Labour Law 12 of 2013. [5] [6]
Zamalek Sporting Club, commonly referred to as Zamalek, is an Egyptian professional sports club based in Giza, Egypt. The club is best known for its professional men's football team, which plays in the Egyptian Premier League, the top tier of the Egyptian football league system. The club is renowned for its consistent success at both domestic and continental levels, regularly contending in CAF tournaments.
Hassan Shehata is an Egyptian retired football manager and former professional football player who played as a forward. He is considered as one of the best forwards in the history of African football. He is nicknamed the "Master". As a manager, Shehata led Egypt to three consecutive Africa Cup of Nations titles, in 2006, 2008 and 2010. He is the first ever coach to win three consecutive Africa Cup of Nations titles.
The Cabinet of Egypt is the chief executive body of the Arab Republic of Egypt. It consists of the Prime Minister and the cabinet ministers.
The General Intelligence Service, often referred to as the Mukhabarat is an Egyptian intelligence agency responsible for providing national security intelligence, both domestically and internationally. The GIS is part of the Egyptian intelligence community, together with the Office of Military Intelligence Services and Reconnaissance and National Security Agency.
The Ministry of Culture of Egypt is a ministry responsible for maintaining and promoting the culture of Egypt.
The Ministry of Interior of Egypt is a part of the Cabinet of Egypt. It is responsible for law enforcement in Egypt.
The Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment is the Nigerian Federal Ministry concerned with relations between workers and employers. It is headed by the Minister of Labour and Employment, who is appointed by the President, and is assisted by a Permanent Secretary, who is a career civil servant.
The Ministry of Information was the ministry in charge of state-owned media and press in Egypt, and for regulating the practices through affiliate agencies between 1971 until its latest dissolution in 2021.
The Ministry of Manpower is the ministry in charge of manpower, labor relations and emigration of Egyptian workers.
Abdelkader Aamara is a Moroccan politician of the Justice and Development Party and its Chief Treasurer. On 3 January 2012, he was nominated as the Minister for Industry, Trade and New Technologies in the cabinet of Abdelilah Benkirane. Between 2013 and 2016, he was the Minister for Energy, Mines, Water and Environment and between 5 April 2017 and 7 October 2021, he had been the minister for Equipment, Transport and Water Logistics in the cabinet of El Othmani. Between 2 & 20 August 2018, he took an interim position as the Minister for Economy and Finance following the firing of Mohamed Boussaid. He has served as MP for Salé since 2002 and is a professor at the Hassan II Institute of Agronomy in Rabat, from which he graduated in 1986.
Ahmed Gamal El Din is a retired police general and Egypt's former minister of interior. He served in the Qandil cabinet.
Khaled Azhari is an Egyptian politician and the former minister of manpower and immigration. He was one of the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) members serving in the Qandil cabinet.
Hassan Bin Muhamad Bin Shehata Bin Mousa al-Anani, known as Sheikh Hassan Shehata, was a scholar who was killed in the small village of Zawyat Abu Musalam in Giza
The 30 June protests occurred in Egypt on 30 June 2013, marking the one-year anniversary of Mohamed Morsi's inauguration as president. The events ended with the 2013 Egyptian coup d'état after mass protests across Egypt demanding the immediate resignation of the president. The rallies were partly a response to Tamarod, an ostensibly grassroots movement that launched a petition in April 2013, calling for Morsi and his government to step down. Tamarod claimed to have collected more than 22 million signatures for their petition by June 30, although this figure was not verified by independent sources. A counter-campaign in support of Morsi's presidency, named Tagarod, claimed to have collected 26 million signatures by the same date, but this figure was also unverified and not mentioned in media nearly as much as Tamarod's, with no reliable sources repeating it. The movements in opposition to Morsi culminated in the June 30 protests that occurred across the country. According to the Egyptian military, which calculated the number of protesters via helicopter scans of demonstration perimeters across the country, the June 30 protests had 32 million protesters, making them "the biggest protests in Egypt's history." However, independent observers raised concerns that the Egyptian government exaggerated the actual number of anti-Morsi protestors, with some research determining that only around one to two million people protested across the country against Morsi.
Kamal Abu Eita is a long-time Egyptian trade unionist and former government minister. As a civil servant at the Real Estate Tax Authority, Abu Eita led a successful struggle for trade union autonomy against the state-controlled Egyptian Trade Union Federation (ETUF) during the Mubarak regime. A prominent figure during the 2011 Egyptian Revolution he helped found the country's first independent union confederation, the Egyptian Federation of Independent Trade Unions (EFITU). Elected to the People's Assembly following the democratic parliamentary election of 2011-12, Abu-Eita served as Minister of Manpower and Immigration between July 2013 and March 2014.
Ministry of Housing, Utilities and Urban Communities (MoHUUC) is responsible for addressing Egypt's housing issues, with a mandate to provide public housing, drinking water and wastewater treatment utilities, and the planning and subdivision of new urban communities. It is headquartered in Cairo since its inception in 1961, and administers the nation's largest real estate developer, the New Urban Communities Authority, and the largest contractor, the Arab Contractors.
The 2019 Egyptian protests were mass protests in Cairo, Alexandria, Damietta and other cities on 20, 21 and 27 September 2019 in which the protestors called for President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to be removed from power. Security forces responded with tear gas, rubber bullets and, as of 23 October 2019, 4300 arbitrary arrests had been made, based on data from the Egyptian Center for Economic and Social Rights, the Egyptian Commission for Rights and Freedoms, the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information, among which 111 were minors according to Amnesty International and the Belady Foundation. Prominent arrestees included human rights lawyer Mahienour el-Massry, journalist and former leader of the Constitution Party Khaled Dawoud and two professors of political science at Cairo University, Hazem Hosny and Hassan Nafaa. The wave of arrests was the biggest in Egypt since Sisi formally became president in 2014.
Ahmed Abdel Wahab Pasha (1889–1938) was an Egyptian statesman who served as the minister of finance between 1934 and 1936.
Sayed Marei was an Egyptian politician who held various posts during the presidency of Gamal Abdel Nasser and Anwar Sadat. He is one of the officials who shaped the agrarian activities in Egypt during the 1950s and 1960s.
Mohamed Mohamed Salah el-Din Mostafa is an Egyptian engineer and military general, holding the position of Minister of Military Production since 14 August 2022 in the Ministry of Mostafa Madbouly, and he held the position of Vice President of the National Authority for Military Production Since 24 November 2020.